Boston Globe, July 28, 2006 In the beginning there was a rhythm. It crossed the Atlantic with the slave trade and came to thrive in Cuba. About 70 years ago, it found its way back to Congo (etched into the grooves of Cuban 78s), where most of the Cuban slaves had come from in the […]
Tag: africa
The beats of their hearts
Boston Globe, July 14, 2006 There’s a little-known law in the music business that says that every few years, an anointed world music act seeps into the mainstream, where it becomes soundtrack material for coffee shop speed-dating events or grad-student dinner parties. Quality and shelf-life vary. The Cape Verdean doyenne Cesaria Evora, for much of […]
Evora delights with simplicity
Boston Globe, April 5, 2006 Cesaria Evora is an icon: Her gorgeous albums of Cape Verdean morna and other Afro-Atlantic sounds are part of today’s world- music canon. At 65, she has brought the sound and sentiment of her rocky archipelago into even the sparsest CD collections. Evora plays to full houses, as she did […]
A star in South Africa is ready for the world to listen
Boston Globe, March 12, 2006 “If a little tree grows under a baobab, it will die a sapling,” an African proverb says. Applied to the music world, it means that sometimes the greats are so great that their shadow leaves little room for new artists to emerge. That would seem to be the case for […]
Touré always has a new groove
Boston Globe, January 20, 2006 He’s been called an African Cat Stevens, which seems odd. For there’s little of the moody singer-songwriter in Daby Toure, the rising star from Mauritania who rocked Boston’s Bastille Day outdoor concert last July with a danceable, sweat-drenched set, and returns for a performance at the Somerville Theatre tonight. It’s […]
Part urban, part traditional, completely contagious
Boston Globe, November 13, 2005 Cynics, begone! For all the depredations of commercial radio and the antics of add-water-and-stir instant celebrities, music still has the power to deliver the shock of the new. And every once in a while, a band comes along to prove it. The Congolese outfit Konono No. 1, which appears at […]
Gangbe’s fascinating rhythms
Boston Globe, October 21, 2005 Although a few ubiquitous artists dominate the “world music” canon and the racks of your favorite CD megachain, African music isn’t standing still. Across the continent, young musicians are experimenting with electronica, hip-hop, reggae, jazz, and new takes on traditional forms. Just a fraction of this creative ferment finds its […]
Zap Mama: often path-breaking, always funky
Boston Globe, October 5, 2005 World-music tastemakers are divided on Zap Mama. The Afro-funk outfit, led by Belgian-Congolese singer Marie Daulne, broke out in the early 1990s with a roots a cappella sound before throwing off the shackles of ethnic categorization with more international pop and funk efforts. While the pundits debate authenticity, the band […]
A living legend nurtures his roots
Boston Globe, September 21, 2005 African music trends come and go. Nigerian Afrobeat and Congolese soukous, lively at home, are currently quiet on the world scene, but Senegalese hip-hop and coupe-decale from Ivory Coast are rising. Yet amid the flux, the music of Mali never goes out of style. The landlocked nation is home to […]
Alluring Lura goes all out
Boston Globe, September 14, 2005 Bostonians whose awareness of Cape Verdean music begins and ends with Cesaria Evora had the chance to expand their horizons Saturday evening when singer Lura, the rocky archipelago’s current chart- topping sensation, visited the Berklee Performance Center. Hers was a total performance. She covered styles ranging from ballads and batuku, […]
Ebony and Ivoirité
Transition Magazine #94, October 2oo3. Reprinted at Alternet. Jil-Alexandre N’Dia is living the Ivorian dream. Eight years ago, N’Dia came to America. For the last five years, along with his childhood friend Daniel Ahouassa, N’Dia has run Abidjan.net, a popular Web site that caters to migrants from Ivory Coast, the West African nation of their […]